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1 April 2004 Sulfentrazone Persistence in Southern Soils: Bioavailable Concentration and Effect on a Rotational Cotton Crop
CHRISTOPHER L. MAIN, THOMAS C. MUELLER, ROBERT M. HAYES, JOHN W. WILCUT, THOMAS F. PEEPER, RONALD E. TALBERT, WILLIAM W. WITT
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Abstract

Field studies were conducted from 1998 to 2000 in Tennessee, North Carolina, Arkansas, and Oklahoma to determine the effects of sulfentrazone carryover to a cotton rotational crop from sulfentrazone applied the previous year. Sulfentrazone applied the previous year at 400 g/ha caused no yield loss in Tennessee, >30% yield reduction in Oklahoma, and 20% yield loss in Arkansas and North Carolina. In most experiments in this study, visual evaluations of injury closely correlated with final cotton lint yield (r2 =0.84).

Nomenclature: Sulfentrazone; cotton, Gossypium hirsutum L.

Additional index words: Bioassay, herbicide carryover, PROTOX inhibitor, rotational crops.

CHRISTOPHER L. MAIN, THOMAS C. MUELLER, ROBERT M. HAYES, JOHN W. WILCUT, THOMAS F. PEEPER, RONALD E. TALBERT, and WILLIAM W. WITT "Sulfentrazone Persistence in Southern Soils: Bioavailable Concentration and Effect on a Rotational Cotton Crop," Weed Technology 18(2), 346-352, (1 April 2004). https://doi.org/10.1614/WT-03-091R1
Published: 1 April 2004
JOURNAL ARTICLE
7 PAGES


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